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Hitler's suicidal urge prolonged WW II: Study

Discussion in 'WWII Today' started by JCFalkenbergIII, Jul 19, 2008.

  1. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    Hitler's suicidal urge prolonged WW II: Study


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    Press Trust of India
    Friday, July 18, 2008
    The world would have been spared much of the devastations of the Second World War had it not been for Adolf Hitler's ''suicidal urge'' to enforce a final confrontation, a new study of the conflict has suggested.

    Germany would have accepted surrender in the war as early as 1943 if it were not for Hitler's fanaticism, suggests the new definitive research, 'The German Reich and the Second World War', which took academics from the military history centre of the German armed forces 30 years to complete.

    It says Hitler was advised as early as 1942 in Berlin that the war was lost. However, the Fhrer's ''suicidal urge'' to enforce a final confrontation helped prolong the conflict.

    ''It will be impossible to write a history of the Second World War without reference to this work,'' Col Winfried Heinemann, the head of research at the centre, was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph of Britain.

    The research underlines that Hitler ''waged his personal war for six years, supported by sentiment in Germany that remained broadly favourable even after a series of defeats''.

    ''To the Germans, no alternative appeared feasible, other than the unconditional surrender demanded by the enemy,'' concludes the history on the global conflict.


    NDTV.com: Hitler's suicidal urge prolonged WW II: Study
     

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